Combinations Of Fentanyl And Other Drugs Add New Dimension To Devastating Overdose Epidemic

While methamphetamine has been a problem in the United States for a long time, there is a rising concern about fentanyl use and fatal overdoses. However, the two drugs combined are adding another layer to the crisis.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “[o]ver 150 people die every day from overdoses related to synthetic opioids like fentanyl.” Now, there is an increasing number of overdoses that are being caused by a combination of multiple drugs.

Last year, 20% of the total fatal overdoses included an opioid like fentanyl and a psychostimulant, such as meth, according to preliminary federal information, per The Wall Street Journal. Ten years before that, those combinations only made up around 2% of fatal overdoses.

While using any of these drugs on their own poses serious health risks and even death, meth can lead to deadly heart damage, hallucinations, and erratic actions.

Last year, around two-thirds of people who died while using psychostimulants also had opioids in their systems, but that isn’t always intentional. Sometimes the drug they intended to consume is laced with something else, or there’s cross-contamination where the drugs are produced.

There is also an increase in overdose deaths across the board. Federal data revealed that last year, around 33,400 deaths involved psychostimulants, which was an increase of more than 340% from five years before. In the same amount of time, fatalities involving synthetic opioids increased 270% and total drug fatalities also rose 71%.

As psychostimulant deaths have become more common, so have deaths that also involved opioids. Last year, around 75% of meth-related fatalities in the state of North Carolina also involved fentanyl.

Meth and fentanyl usage has both surged across the country and are spreading into new regions. For example, drug traffickers are pushing meth into the northeast and fentanyl availability is increasing in western states where meth once dominated.

There is also more fentanyl and meth being smuggled across the border. For example, a Mexican national was recently sentenced to prison for his involvement in an attempted smuggling of meth and fentanyl. The seizure was the country’s biggest for each drug for the calendar years 2021 and 2022 as of last month. The trafficking attempt included more than 17,000 pounds of meth and about 389 pounds of fentanyl.

This month, border officers found 26 pounds of meth and 10 pounds of fentanyl in El Paso in the same smuggling effort. Port Director Ray Provencio said that it’s not normal to find huge quantities of two different hard drugs, but dual smuggling is becoming more common.

As of October, Border Patrol agents from the San Francisco sector had seized more than 1,000 pounds of fentanyl since the start of this fiscal year, which is a 200% increase from the last year. While fentanyl seizures are more of a recent trend, the inflow of meth has been a problem for much longer. 

Official Suggests Organized Crime To Blame For Theft Of ‘Irreplaceable’ Celtic Gold

A German official said “organized crime” was likely responsible for stealing a valuable cache of Celtic gold coins this week from a museum.

At least 483 coins dating back to about 100 B.C. were stolen from the Celtic and Roman Museum in Manching, Germany, early Tuesday morning. The coins, discovered during an archaeological excavation in the area in 1999, are worth millions of dollars. 

“It’s clear that you don’t simply march into a museum and take this treasure with you,” said Markus Blume, Bavaria’s minister of science and arts, during a Wednesday interview with BR, a public broadcaster. “It’s highly secured and as such there’s a suspicion that we’re rather dealing with a case of organized crime.”

The museum’s surveillance and the town’s phone systems were down during the heist, according to Blume. Three other items were also nabbed during the theft. 

“The loss of the Celtic treasure is a disaster,” Blume said. “As a testament to our history, the gold coins are irreplaceable.”

The city’s mayor, Herbert Nerb, told German outlet Sueddeutsche Zeitung that the city’s communication networks had been “cut off.”

“The museum is actually a high-security location. But all the connections to the police were severed,” he said. 

He blamed “professionals” for the theft and said the heist was a “catastrophe.”

When the coins were discovered more than twenty years ago near Manching, the finding became the largest stash of Celtic gold found in the 20th century, according to The Associated Press. The small town, with a population of about 11,000, is 37 miles north of Munich. 

The Celts were an Indo-European people who settled throughout Europe, including parts of what is now Germany, especially the southern portions. The earliest archaeological evidence of the Celts can be found in an Austrian settlement dated back to around 700 B.C. 

Museum officials are concerned that the thieves might melt down the coins, making them impossible to track down and recover. Blume said the thieves had demonstrated “incredible criminal energy.”

Police have blamed other German museum thefts on organized crime in recent years, including the 2019 robbery of 21 valuable pieces of jewelry from the Green Vault museum in Dresden. Authorities linked members of the Remmo-Clan, a Berlin-based crime family. Several members have been arrested, but the trial is ongoing, and none of the pieces of jewelry, worth roughly $128 million, have been found.

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